University of Iowa has a very good pharmacy school and it's a great town (it's where I go). My roommate is a pharmacy major. Just go to any college you want to attends website and they will have all the information on it about how to apply and all the prereq's you need!
2007-11-05 16:05:48
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answer #1
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answered by Courtney B 2
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I would take a few years off and mature a little bit. The fact that you are 16 and were home schooled could make the transistion to college a little much. I started when I was 17 and it was a tough adjustment that I was unable to make until a few years later. If taking a few years off is not an option, try just taking a few pre-req classes a a community college before making the jump to a 4-year University, this could make the move a little easier.
2007-11-06 00:17:44
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answer #2
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answered by sully5408 3
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Ok, I know from personal experiance, I started college at 14. If you really want to go to college, you better take few classes (like only 9 or so credit hours), and go to community college, not like a real university.
You need stuff like pre calc 1 precalc 2 calc, trig, eng 101 eng 102 eng 241 eng 242 stat 261, chem 121 psy 101 soc 101 anth 101 phys 141 phys 142 etc. ALOT of stuff to get at community college.
You DON'T want to stress yourself out and burn out, that could ruin the rest of your education, take it serious, but also pace yourself and smell the roses. But don't stop to much (thats kinda what I did). You gotta go on to a real university sometime.
2007-11-06 00:24:19
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answer #3
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answered by abyssal_nuclei 3
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At the University I attended, there was an English composition test on entrance, to determine if you had the skills necessary to write the papers that would be a part of your coursework.
Just a friendly word, here. Your English needs a lot of polishing. I agree with one of the posters. Try a local community college for awhile first. It will be easier on your mind.
2007-11-06 01:36:51
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answer #4
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answered by ZORCH 6
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most community colleges let you take pre-requisites like english or college algebra and let you transfer the credits to a 4 year college so when you attend the 4 year college you can start right in on pharmacy studies instead of taking the general education classes
2007-11-06 00:11:39
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answer #5
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answered by babygirl 4
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You need to take a SAT test.. Which shows how much you have learned. Most all colleges require that. Now you need to start applying to the college where you can get a degree in pharmacy....
2007-11-06 00:06:48
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answer #6
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answered by ♥♥The Queen Has Spoken♥♥ 7
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your graduating at the top of your class and your asking a question like this on yahoo answers, i thought someone of your brilliance would be smarter than this
2007-11-06 00:07:08
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answer #7
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answered by tommy 2
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take the SATs or ACTs!
2007-11-06 00:10:50
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answer #8
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answered by cindy11489 3
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